From Athletics to Engineering: 8 Ways to Support Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for All
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About this ebook
With this book they explain that we all have a role to play and the first step starts with each of us. If you love your neighbors, talk about it, check your biases, expand your comfort zone, build diverse teams, collaborate, and align actions with goals and values, then you will discover you are closer than you think to making real progress.
Using clear, accessible examples from their experience, this easy-to-read book presents actions readers can take to make a positive contribution on diversity, equity and inclusion. Though many anecdotes are pulled from athletics and engineering, the lessons they offer are applicable to all sectors of society and can foster individual growth and collective harmony. With no-nonsense explanations and straightforward writing, this book is quick to read and simple to internalize.
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From Athletics to Engineering - Johnnie Johnson
Praise for
From Athletics to Engineering:
8 Ways to Support Diversity,
Equity, and Inclusion for All
I absolutely love the book. It is as well organized, written, researched and humanistically authored as any book I have read or listened to. I believe this book should be required reading for every school and college in America, every sports team, every police department (which you both support and call for change), and every corporation.
Gino Blefari, CEO, HomeServices of America, Inc. and Chairman, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Worldwide, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
I have been searching for a book on diversity that would offer some commonsense guidance on how to do my part. This is the book I have been seeking! Michael and Johnnie have extended an inspiring and heartfelt invitation to all of us to roll up our sleeves and join them in learning how to put in the effort needed to make our world a more inclusive, supportive, and loving place. I think this book is especially useful for teachers like me and recommend it for anyone looking to be an active partner in this space.
Alison Schnettler, preschool teacher, Louisville, Colorado, USA
Johnnie and Michael deliver a book that goes beyond platitudes. Each chapter is jam-packed with actionable strategies that managers can use to create a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive workplace. Read it. Read it again. And then read it with your team.
Daron K. Roberts, author of Call an Audible and
Director, Center for Sports Leadership & Innovation,
The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
As a science teacher and someone who loves sports, I found the analogies in the book were a match made in heaven. The book was well organized, and the steps were carefully laid out so that even individuals as young as 15 would be able to understand the message the book was trying to convey. I found many of the stories relatable, powerful, and inspirational.
Rebecca Reyna Neal, Chemistry and Physics Teacher, Three Rivers Jr/Sr High School, Three Rivers, Texas, USA
This book is incredibly relevant for the times. Johnnie and Michael were honest, tactful, and most importantly, empathetic in sharing why diversity and inclusion efforts are so important in the world today.
Eric Impraim, Insurance Marketing Portfolio Manager, Tucson, Arizona, USA
Finally! A book that puts forth steps we can take to solve biases and prejudices. The 8 Ways they recommend are powerful, each and every one. This book will become dinged up, dog-eared and post-it-noted on my desk as I put it to use EVERY DAY in my own journey to temper bias and stay focused on getting to the goal together.
Bobbi Burke, Owner/Broker/REALTOR®, Envoy Real Estate Services, LLC, Phoenix Arizona, USA
8 Ways is an outstandingly well-written book and provides a simple and practical roadmap—a game plan—designed to support DEI in the workplace and in day-to-day life. Today, DEI is a fearful topic because, while society has a general sense of what a successful DEI implementation feels like, we previously did not have a specific game plan of how to get there. Now we do!
John Tortora, Attorney, Former President of the San Jose Sharks and National Hockey League Executive, Morgan Hill, California, USA
Johnnie Johnson and Michael E. Webber
From Athletics to Engineering:
8 Ways to Support Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for All
ISBN (Print Edition): 978-1-09835-478-7
ISBN (eBook Edition): 978-1-09835-479-4
© 2020 Johnnie Johnson and Dr. Michael E. Webber. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, Johnber Multimedia Inc., except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
We dedicate this book to everyone who has carried, is carrying, or will carry the baton forward in the multigenerational relay toward a more civil society.
Contents
Teresa’s Foreword
Michael’s Prologue: White Speechlessness
Johnnie’s Prologue: The Road Is Rocky
Introduction
Chapter 1: It Starts With Each of Us
Chapter 2: Love Your Neighbor
Chapter 3: Talk About It
Chapter 4: Check Your Biases and Blind Spots
Chapter 5: Expand Your Comfort Zone
Chapter 6: Build Diverse Teams
Chapter 7: Collaborate
Chapter 8: Align Actions With Goals and Values
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Endnotes
Teresa’s Foreword
I am a Latina who grew up in the heart of the South with immigrant parents who were trying to assimilate to life in the U.S. and struggling to make ends meet. Similarly, Johnnie Johnson, co-author of this book, is a Black man who was raised in a small town in Texas by a single mom on welfare.
Johnnie and I have developed a special bond over our shared personal experiences and challenges that come with growing up immersed in the unconscious biases we faced then and today. Through heart-to-heart conversations where we shared anecdotes about our upbringings, race relations, racial disparities, and the role we both play in creating meaningful change, we realized how similar our lives were in many ways. Though we grew up with different genders, races, hometowns, and generations, we both had to overcome adversity and prejudices.
Despite the challenges along the way, we were able to build on the work of earlier generations to advance the cause of diversity, equity, and inclusion for all through our own examples of success. After leaving his humble beginnings, Johnnie has had thriving football, real estate, and executive coaching careers. And after leaving my humble beginnings years ago, I was appointed as the chief diversity, equity, and inclusion officer for HomeServices of America. It was Gino Blefari, the CEO of the company, who introduced me to Johnnie. HomeServices of America, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, is one of the largest residential real estate companies in the world, with brands such as Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and Real Living Real Estate operating under its umbrella. The simple fact that there is a C-level executive position with a responsibility for diversity, equity, and inclusion at one of the largest real estate companies in the world is, by itself, a remarkable sign of progress. That the position is held by a Latina is also notable.
Climbing the corporate ranks in the male-dominated world of real estate has presented me with too many examples of sexism and chauvinism, which demonstrate how much further we have to go in society to reach true diversity, equity, and inclusion for all. I recognize through my personal path and professional experience that this topic is important for empowering people to reach their full potential, and I think every company and community should take the topic seriously.
So when Johnnie and his co-author Michael Webber invited me to write the foreword for this book, I was honored. I was also terrified because I’m not a writer, and this topic, while central to my life experience, is outside of my comfort zone. In fact, one of the lessons Johnnie and Michael drive home in this book is that getting outside of your comfort zone is a critical ingredient to progress because it allows us to have difficult conversations, discover self-truths, and realize that to make a difference and effect real change, we must be willing to be vulnerable. I think they’re absolutely right, so I agreed.
Though I’m confident in the areas of my professional work, my personal insecurities about being good enough to write even a page in a book addressing the most daunting generational challenges in human society arose immediately. I overcame this insecurity as best I could, and I hope many of you will also not allow your insecurities to hold you back.
Reflecting on a lifetime of my personal and professional life experiences related to the broad topic of societal biases and the injustices that can result from them is a daunting but worthwhile task. These experiences took on heightened meaning when the killing of George Floyd propelled the world into a frenzy of disbelief and horror. That this killing took place in Minneapolis, where my company is headquartered, made it even more real to me. For me, this scene wasn’t some abstract problem halfway around the world. Hearing the cry of this man to his own mother as he drew his last breaths was like hearing the cry of my own son, and I, too, was affected by the injustice and cruelty demonstrated that day. My passion for this subject is to make sure others do not needlessly suffer in this way.
As Michael shares in his prologue about his students and their speechlessness in the aftermath of Floyd’s killing, I also witnessed speechlessness and disgruntled reactions from our white executives, owners, and real estate agents who experienced a range of emotions from anger to resentment to confusion. There was also a great deal of distrust and uncertainty. In fact, because of my position in the company as the top-ranking executive in charge of diversity and inclusion, I received numerous calls from office locations across the country requesting help with training, education, and tools to help alleviate some of the uncomfortable conversations that were taking place in our offices and homes.
Just as Michael had reached out to Johnnie to facilitate a conversation with his engineering students, I also reached out because I knew he could help me communicate with the agents as well. It was from those conversations and a sense of shared purpose among the three of us to achieve a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive world that I learned about this book.
Johnnie and Michael laid out some straightforward, logical ways to make progress that are simultaneously accessible and reasonable. Their lessons were learned from decades of coaching, mentoring, and leadership, and they can empower individuals to overcome bias, address gender, racial, or other disparities, and create a roadmap that will help guide readers along the path toward diversity, equity, and inclusion for all. Their purpose-driven framework makes me both hopeful and positive. If their ideas and strategies are widely implemented, we will make real progress toward inclusive work environments and racial harmony in all aspects of life.
I should also note that their teamwork on this—the Black